For most of human history, understanding the behaviours of objects in the sky was neither a curiosity nor an academic pursuit, as it is throughout much of the world today. Rather, knowing how celestial objects behaved was vital to navigating land, seas and growing seasons, and therefore deeply intertwined with spirituality. Providing a brief history of astronomy across centuries, this animation touches on how Polynesians’ and Europeans’ sophisticated understanding of the skies helped them spread across the globe, and offers a brief tour of some of the world’s most remarkable archaeological sites believed to have been built to trace the movement of the Sun over seasons. For more on early celestial navigation, watch the Aeon Original Slingshots of the Oceanic, which explores the parallels between the sophisticated navigation techniques of ancient Pacific mariners and modern space exploration.
The remarkable innovations inspired by our need to know the night sky
Video by The Royal Society, BBC Ideas

videoHistory of science
Ideas ‘of pure genius’ – how astronomers have measured the Universe across history
29 minutes

videoAstronomy
Visualisations explore what the deep future holds for our night sky
6 minutes

videoHistory of technology
The voyages of Ancient Pacific mariners echo in modern space exploration
2 minutes

videoEngineering
How water-based clocks revolutionised the way we measure time
10 minutes

videoAstronomy
Close encounters of a different kind – what if Venus, Neptune or Saturn hovered close by?
2 minutes

videoHistory of science
How one of history’s most beautiful books was used to find fate in the cosmos
6 minutes

videoHistory of ideas
From sky charts to atomic clocks, time is a mysterious story that humans keep inventing
8 minutes

videoAstronomy
Take a 10 billion-year journey with a photon, from a distant supernova to Earth
3 minutes

videoPhysics
To change the way you see the Moon, view it from the Sun’s perspective
5 minutes